To Select Components and Languages

The installer checks your host for previously installed versions of
product components. If any are found, a list of the detected components is
displayed, under the title Component Products on This Host.

Later in the installation session, you might be instructed to upgrade
or remove those components before continuing. When these issues are resolved,
installation can proceed.

The installer displays the Component Selection Main Menu. For example:

Not all product components have subcomponents. In this case, these components
are displayed, but no response is required from you.

Make your subcomponent selections.

After you have
confirmed all your subcomponent selections, the installer queries you about
installing multilingual packages.

To install multilingual packages for all selected components,
type Y and press Return.

Default is N, which means only English
packages are installed. If you type Y, multilingual packages are installed
for all languages for all the components you selected.

Resolve product component dependency errors.

If there
is a problem with component dependencies, the installer displays a Product
Dependency Check error or warning, depending on the problem. Typical problems
might include:

A local dependency has not been met

In this situation,
return to Component Selection and select the appropriate product component
to satisfy the local dependency.

A remote dependency will be met later during postinstallation
configuration

If you do not intend to specify a remote installation,
return to Component Selection and select the appropriate product component
to satisfy the dependency locally.

Previous versions of product components are already installed
on the local host

If incompatible versions of product components
are detected, you will need to exit the installer and upgrade or remove the
incompatible versions.

Resolve shared component dependency errors.

If any
incompatible versions of shared components are found on the host, you are
asked if you want to upgrade them. Review the Shared Components Upgrade Required
list and determine if it is safe for the installer to automatically upgrade
these shared components.

Type 1 (the default) or press Return to have the installer
upgrade the shared components.

Type 2 to cancel the installation session so that you can
upgrade the shared components manually.

If you type 2, you must remove or upgrade the shared components on the
Shared Components Upgrade Required list before you can continue with installation.

On Solaris OS, indicate if the installer should upgrade the J2SE
SDK.

If an incompatible system-wide version of the J2SE SDK is
detected, you are asked if you want the installer to upgrade or if you want
to upgrade manually. The installer performs this check only on the Solaris
platform because the Linux platform does not have a specific, system-wide
installation of the J2SE SDK.